You are reading

JetBlue flight attendants picket outside Long Island City headquarters demanding job protections amid proposed Spirit acquisition

JetBlue flight attendants and union members picket outside the airline’s corporate headquarters at 27-01 Queens Plaza North calling for job protections with the possible acquisition of Spirit Airlines on the horizon. (Courtesy of TWU Local 579)

Tuesday, March 21 By Bill Parry 

New York’s hometown airline has a disgruntled faction among its hometown workforce.

Over 100 JetBlue flight attendants and members of the Transport Workers Union (TWU) Local 579 rallied outside the air carrier’s Long Island City corporate headquarters Monday.

During an informational picket, flight attendants called on JetBlue to provide answers as to what the carrier’s proposed $3.8 billion acquisition of Spirit Airlines will mean for their jobs and livelihoods. The picketers demanded the company promise protections for workers in the event JetBlue’s acquisition of Spirit Airlines is approved.

“As flight attendants, we are the cornerstone of JetBlue, critical to its success, yet JetBlue management continues to disregard our members,” TWU Local 579 President Tyesha Best said. “Our Union’s contract is blatantly violated and they refuse to provide written protections for Inflight Crewmembers in the case the Spirit acquisition goes through. JetBlue has shown time and time again that it neither respects nor values its flight attendants,”

TWU Local 579 represents more than 6,800 JetBlue flight attendants.

“We have a five-year contract in place for our inflight crewmembers that was voted on and ratified in December 2021 after negotiations with the Transport Workers Union (TWU),” JetBlue said in a statement. “We are a year into the TWU’s collective bargaining agreement, and we will continue to honor what has been agreed upon. We are committed to maintaining an ongoing open dialogue with all of our crewmembers to listen and address concerns, as they are core to our success.”

TWU Local 579 members won their first collective bargaining agreement with JetBlue after a years-long battle. Still, the union says JetBlue continues to ignore new scheduling rules and other critical provisions of the contract.

According to TWU Local 579, JetBlue flight attendants face higher attrition rates compared to industry standards. They also have lower pay and many have been unable to seek higher leadership opportunities.

(Courtesy of TWU Local 579)

JetBlue’s failure to resolve these issues has created concern among workers that an acquisition would only magnify mismanagement within the airline.

“We’re picketing today to ensure JetBlue hears us loud and clear,” Best said. “It would be extremely difficult to support this acquisition considering JetBlue hasn’t provided legally binding protections for us and continues to dismiss our requests to be treated fairly.”

Monday’s picket comes two weeks after a lawsuit was filed by the U.S. Justice Department seeking to prevent JetBlue from acquiring Spirit Airlines. Antitrust regulators argue that the deal would reduce competition in the airline industry, creating higher fairs and reduced options for customers.

On Tuesday, a U.S. District Judge in Boston set a non-jury trial date for Oct. 16. JetBlue concluded its statement by accentuating the positive:

“Our merger with Spirit will bring more opportunities and job growth that will benefit our current crewmembers and Spirit’s team members, and at the same time will allow JetBlue inflight crewmembers to participate in negotiations for a new contract, accelerating the current timeline by a number of years.”

email the author: news@queenspost.com
No comments yet

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Arsenal of ghost guns and thousands of rounds seized during Rockaway Park raid: DA

A Rockaway Park man was criminally charged with a slew of crimes after an arsenal of more than 30 firearms, including ghost guns and assault weapons, was uncovered along with thousands of rounds of ammunition and other weapons-related paraphernalia were seized during a raid at his home on Beach 117th Street on Wednesday.

Ryszard Materna, 51, was arraigned Thursday before Queens Criminal Court Judge Germaine Auguste on a 281-count complaint after a long-term investigation into his purchase of polymer-based firearm components that can easily be assembled into operable weapons, known as ghost guns.

Armed robber hits 7-Eleven stores in three Queens neighborhoods in just over an hour Wednesday morning: NYPD

Police from two Queens NYPD precincts are looking for an armed robber who targeted 7-Eleven stores in three different neighborhoods in just over an hour during the early morning of Wednesday, Apr. 17.

Police from the 106th Precinct in Ozone Park reported that the first heist went down just before 2:25 a.m. at the 7-Eleven located at 112-11 Liberty Ave. in South Richmond Hill. The perpetrator allegedly pulled out a handgun and demanded money from the 23-year-old man behind the counter, who complied, handing over $400 in cash from the register, police said.

Jamaica Estates man beaten, robbed by bat-wielding thugs near Cunningham Park: NYPD

A 22-year-old Jamaica Estates man was beaten and robbed in broad daylight three blocks west of Cunningham Park on Saturday, and police from the 107th Precinct in Fresh Meadows are looking for the suspects who attacked him with a baseball bat.

The incident occurred just after 7 p.m., as the victim was walking home in the vicinity of 189th Street and Aberdeen Avenue when he was set upon by the two assailants who struck him in the face and head with the baseball bat, police said. They forcibly removed his cell phone and fled in a black Pontiac Grand Am, heading northbound on 109th Street toward Union Turnpike.

Dozens of restaurant and small business owners urge Sen. Ramos to support the $8B Metropolitan Park proposal at Citi Field

Around fifty restaurant and small business owners from Corona, Jackson Heights, and East Elmhurst signed a letter asking state Senator Jessica Ramos to support the $8 billion Metropolitan Park proposal from New York Mets owner Steve Cohen and Hard Rock International to build a casino and entertainment complex on the parking lot adjacent to Citi Field.

Jessica Rico, the owner of Mojitos Restaurant & Bar in Jackson Heights, hand-delivered the letter to a Ramos staffer while the Senator was in Albany on April 19.